Beverly Deepe Keever, Date of Birth, Place of Birth

    

Beverly Deepe Keever

American journalist, correspondent, author, professor

Date of Birth: 01-Jun-1935

Place of Birth: Hebron, Nebraska, United States

Profession: writer, journalist, political journalist

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Gemini


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About Beverly Deepe Keever

  • Beverly Deepe Keever (born June 1, 1935) is an American journalist, Vietnam War correspondent, author and professor emerita of journalism and communications.
  • In 1969 Beverly Deepe married Charles J.
  • Keever. Beverly Deepe Keever has had a varied career that spanned the journalistic profession and professorate.
  • Her career ranged from public opinion polling for an author-syndicated columnist in New York, to war correspondent, to covering Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
  • and then to teaching and researching journalism and communications for 29 years at the University of Hawai’i. As a professor emerita and 40-some years after departing Saigon, she wrote her memoirs of covering the Vietnam War for seven years—longer than any other American correspondent as of that time.
  • Titled Death Zones and Darling Spies, the book chronicles her dispatches as a freelancer and then successively for Newsweek, the New York Herald Tribune, the Christian Science Monitor and the London Daily Express and Sunday Express. Her 1968 coverage of the embattled Khe Sanh combat base was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting by the Christian Science Monitor.
  • Another of her 1968 dispatches was selected by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in its centennial year as one of the 50 great stories by its alumni.
  • In 2001 she was one of some four dozen combat correspondents whose work was selected for an exhibit at the Newseum in Washington, D.C.
  • designed to trace 148 years of war reporting starting with the Crimean conflict of 1853.
  • Fourteen years later, her artifacts and journalistic career were displayed and discussed in the “Reporting Vietnam” exhibit featured at the Newseum through September 2015. She also researched and wrote News Zero: The New York Times and The Bomb.
  • Excerpts from and adaptations of this book have been published in two award-winning cover articles in Honolulu's alternative weekly and on global web sites.
  • She is also a co-editor of U.S.
  • News Coverage of Racial Minorities: A Sourcebook, 1934-1996, for which she conceptualized with others the prospectus of the volume; made arrangements with the publisher; served, in effect, as the managing editor coordinating the writing of 11 other scholars; contributed two chapters and co-authored two others.

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